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    Body: analysis of key rhetorical themes Ethos Appeals: In typical Lange style‚ the address to the Oxford Union opened with the effective use of humour which built his credibility via ethos rhetorical appeal. This approach instantly set the tone of the speech‚ engaging the audience‚ and effectively highlighted the clear differences in opinion between New Zealand and both the US and UK‚ on the nuclear issue. Leading up to the debate both US and UK political circles had been vocal in the disapproval

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    The Four Freedoms Analysis

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    only a strong leader‚ but also a strong speaker whose words paved the future in a significant manner. “The Four Freedoms” speech was delivered by President Roosevelt on January 6‚ 1941 during his third term as a President. During this time period‚ many countries were unstable and were in danger because of the war that was occurring. However‚ President Roosevelt’s speech‚ “The Four Freedoms” delivered in the State of the Union Address was a remarkable

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    The love of equality undermines freedom. Alexis de Tocqueville‚ has plenty to bring to the table with his cerebral perspective of liberty. His idea of freedom is to have equal opportunity but not equal outcome. Another word for that would be the ‘quality of condition’: the opposite of egalitarianism‚ in and of itself. Although Tocqueville does not believe that the American public can use their consumptive freedom properly‚ he states “the Americans entertain the same opinion with respect to the majority”

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    inappropriate language from songs and TV shows that are seen by the general public to removing more explicit books from a public library. In 1901‚ a writer from The Atlantic Monthly published an essay debating the issue of nude statues and if they should be shown in public settings‚ such as a park or an art museum. The author uses several rhetorical strategies to prove their point‚ including their tone throughout the article‚ and analogies to things that the general public will understand. In the

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    My work on Rhetorical Analysis shows my development of the skill recognizing rhetorical aspects in a text. My comfort level with recognizing rhetorical aspects in a text before the assignment was super low due to I am not used to looking closely at the recognizing rhetorical aspects in a text but instead the content of the text. That was clearly shown with the change in direction of my paper from the first draft to my second draft. I moved from looking at the content of the text to recognizing rhetorical

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    Society and Writers

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    Throughout the history of literary work‚ every author has created their own original type of writing. Each author uses many techniques such as sensory language and symbolism. These strategies help the writer to develop the writer’s voice. During the Transcendentalism/American Renaissance period of literature‚ prose‚ fiction‚ and non-fiction used examples to define and clarify. The events and circumstances occurring in the United States at the time influenced their writing. Much like the poets of

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    The Enlightenment Writers

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    The Enlightenment Writers The central ideas of the Enlightenment writers were similar to‚ yet very different from‚ those of the writers of earlier periods. Four major Enlightenment writers were Benjamin Franklin‚ Thomas Paine‚ Thomas Jefferson‚ and Patrick Henry. Their main purpose was to write to educate and edify and not so much as to write for aesthetic purposes. Most of their work was designed to convey truth or give sound instruction on such issues of political‚ social‚ or economic interest

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    Rhetorical Analysis Essay

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    “Shitty First Drafts” by Anne Lamott‚ is a hilarious must read for junior high school students and any other aspiring writers. Her essay inspires comfort and confidence in writing a first draft. It concretes that all writers experience the “shitty” first draft. Anne Lamott wrote this instructional information in 1995‚ but it is timeless information. She blows the idea of writing an immaculate first draft out of the water. Anne supports the idea that bad first drafts will almost always lead to better

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    Step-by-step Rhetorical Analysis 1. Identify the three elements of the rhetorical triangle. a. Who is the speaker? (education‚ ethnicity‚ era‚ political persuasion‚ etc.) b. Who is the audience? c. What is the subject? 2. What is the author saying about the subject? What is his/her assertion? 3. What is the author’s attitude (tone) about the subject? a. What specific word choice (diction) clues the reader in? b. What figures of speech are used? Does the imagery/analogies/allusions conjure

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    Rhetorical Analysis In the early spring of 1986‚ The Challenger was scheduled to launch in the morning from the Kennedy Space Center. The Challenger had seven passengers. One of these passengers was a Christa McAuliffe‚ a social studies teacher from New Hampshire. She was the first ordinary citizen to be going to space. The social studies teacher had won the opportunity through NASA’s Teachers in space program. The spacecraft was in the air only seventy-three seconds before it exploded and broke

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